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— PAGE TWO —
Ivory Tower Editorial
Summer
News
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
— PAGE THREE —
Olympics Tryouts Results
NO. 3
LOS ANGELES 7, CALIFORNIA
MONDAY, JULY 2, 1956
2900 Parking Slots Located on Campus
Parking is where you find it at SC.
There are a total of 2855 student and faculty parking spaces on campus if one knows where to look, according
to a survey made in May
LECTURE
Public School Sacred Music To Be Aired
“Some Problems Involved in Teaching Sacred Music in Secular Schools” is the topic of tomorrow’s Religion and Education series lecture. It will be given at 2:15 p.m. in 133 FH.
John P. Clarke, chairman of the fine arts department of Clarence W. Pierce Junior College, in Canoga Park will be the guest speaker.
Clarke was raised and educated in Southern California and has taught choral music in the L.A. city schools since 1942. He has been organist at the Vermont Square Church in L. A. and the First Methodist Church in Pasadena. He was graduated from SC in 1939.
Studied in Europe
In 1949 he went to Europe for 15 months and studied at the American Conservatory of Music at Fontainbleau, and the National Conservatory of Music in Paris. Clarke was accepted as the only private student of the world renowned organist Marcel Dupre and received much praise from the organ virtuoso for his work.
During World War II he served in the Army as a special agent of the counter intelligence corps in Germany. Besides his work at Pierce Junior College. Clarke is organist director - at the North Glendale Methodist Church.
Fourth Year
This is the fourth year that the Religion and Education lecture series has been presented by University Chaplain Clinton Neyman. Other guest lecturers will be Mrs. J. W. Pixley, teacher of English and senior problems at Venice High School; Dr Samuel Dinin, executive director Bureau of Jewish Education of the Los Angeles Jewish Community Council: and Stewart G. Cole, educational director of the Southern California Region, National Conference of Christian and Jews Incorporated.
Official
Notice
Wednesday, July 4, will be observed by the University as an official holiday. Classes will not meet and all University offices will be closed.
E. C. Bolton,
R. A. Fisher,
A. S. Raubentieimer.
by the University.- Business Manager’s Office.
This figure does not includc the extra spaces available on the new lot at 35th Street and Hoover Boulevard which was completed the first week in June. It added more than 45 student and faculty spaces to the total.
1330 More An additional 1330 spaces are located within a radius of three blocks of the University from 10 cents a day to 50 cents an hour.
Many people have complained that tht closing of 36th Street has cut down the number of parking spaces available, but the survey shows that at the same time the old Dental Field was paved and provided 204 student spaces. The entrance to the new lot is on 37th Place. This is now the largest single student parking lot on campus.
Fre? off campus parking areas include two lots on Exposition near the Museum and the Shrine lots which are usually about half full during the day.
Other Lots Other lots near campus are located at 36th Place and Vermont, which costs 10 cents a day or $2 a month; 36th Street and Vermont, 15 cents a day; and Exposition and Flower, 35 cents a day. The lots vary from 30 to 50 spaces each.
For those who are in a hurry and want to defy the police, fines ranging from $2 to $10 are waiting. Parking where it is marked no standing, stopping, or parking, draws a $10 fine.
Double parking or parking where it is marked temporary no parking for coliseum events also costs $10. A $5 ticket is imposed on people parking in after-hours areas. The least you can draw is $2 for overtime parking in a one or two hour parking zone.
Russian Policies Set for Analysis
SOVIET RESEARCH—Dr. Harold C. Deutsch, who will speak on “Where Are We Going With Russia“ at the assembly tomorrow at 11 a.m., in 133 FH, is shown in the library as he prepares his notes. Deutsch is a visiting professor.
Marineland Trip, Harbor Tour Set
Desert Island Wildlife Greets Trojan 'Consequences Victim
Trojan Jack Forbes, 22, graduate student, had a welcoming committee of sea lions and sea gulls as he arrived at a small desert island in the Santa Barbara group Saturday to ‘‘pay the consequences,”
He will spend two months on the one mile by one-half mile isle with only the sea gulls, sea lions, and a Truth or Consequences staff assistant, Cap Hoskins, to keep him compa,ny. He was selected from the studio audience Friday night to participate in the zany stunt.
The modern Rip van Winkle will be completely out of touch with civilization for the full two months. Food will be dropped from an airplane and the only outsiders will be closed-mouth NBC cameramen who will visit the island from time to time to get pictures for showing on the network program. He will be allowed no radio or newspapers—only books.
When he is flown back to the studio he will be asked questions on such current affairs as the World Series, the Democratic convention, and changes in the world situation. For each shot of the first five he calls correctly he will win $1,000, for the sixth one—$5,000.
Trips to Marineland and the Los Angeles Harbor are scheduled for students and faculty this weekend by the URA.
The Marineland junket will begin Saturday at 8:30 a.m. in front of the PE building. The tour will cost only $1 instead of the usual $2 and will take Trojans through the large marine museum, featuring various forms of fish life, octupus, shell fish, and sea lions.
The boat harbor tour will leave the PE building at 4 p.m. Sunday and the party will go on a cruise of the harbor from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Tillman Hall, URA director, said that students should start looking forward to the trip to Mexico on Saturday, July 14. which will include stopovers at the San Diego Zoo, Tijuana, the Capistrano mission, and the marriage place of Ramona.
Last weekend URA groups visited Disneyland and the Huntington Library.
Tickets for all URA trips and activities can be obtained by visiting the office, 112 PE.
Dr. Deutsch Gives Talk
“Where Are We Going With Russia” will be the topic of Dr. Harold C. Deutsch, visiting professor from the University of Minnesota, when he speaks at 11 a.m. tomorrow in 133 FH.
Dr. Deutsch will analyze the present Soviet policy in terms of what he calls the “long range 40-year program of the Communists.”
“There is more confusion now than at any time in the last 10 years in international relations as the result of the queer gira-tions in Red Policies,” he said, citing the recent deflation of Stalin and its effects on Soviet foreign relations.
“There has been no basic change in the Soviet policy in the last 40 years,” he said, “but only a rythmic pattern in which they play a game of appeasement and then one of toughness.”
The historian will also touch on the Soviet entry into economic and and trade competition with the United States.
Dr. Deutsch is teaching history courses in Contemporary Europe and Germany Under Hitler, and an international relations course called Diplomacy of Wogld War II this summer.
During the World War II. Dr. Deutsch did several special missions for the government including interviewing a group of Hitler’s top generals. He was awarded the Medal of Freedom for his war service.
Dr. Deutsch authored “The Genesis of Napoleonic Imperialism” in 1938 and was a member of the board of editors of the Journal of Modern History from 1948 to 1952. He has also contributed many articles to history magazines.
Roundup
Monday—“Teleforum” moderated by Chancellor Rufus B. Von KleinSmid. Topic is “Israel’s Paramount Proble'.ns.**
8 p.m., KTLA-TV, Channel 5. People interested in working on Summer News meet 1:15 p.m. in 402 SU.
Tuesday — Assembly, Dr. Harold Deutsch, speaking on “Where Are We Going With Russia?”, 11 a.m. in 133 FH. Religion and Education Series at 2:15 p.m., 133 FH. John P. Clarke, guest speaker on Sacred Music in Secular Schools.
Wednesday—-July 4, University holiday.

— PAGE TWO —
Ivory Tower Editorial
Summer
News
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
— PAGE THREE —
Olympics Tryouts Results
NO. 3
LOS ANGELES 7, CALIFORNIA
MONDAY, JULY 2, 1956
2900 Parking Slots Located on Campus
Parking is where you find it at SC.
There are a total of 2855 student and faculty parking spaces on campus if one knows where to look, according
to a survey made in May
LECTURE
Public School Sacred Music To Be Aired
“Some Problems Involved in Teaching Sacred Music in Secular Schools” is the topic of tomorrow’s Religion and Education series lecture. It will be given at 2:15 p.m. in 133 FH.
John P. Clarke, chairman of the fine arts department of Clarence W. Pierce Junior College, in Canoga Park will be the guest speaker.
Clarke was raised and educated in Southern California and has taught choral music in the L.A. city schools since 1942. He has been organist at the Vermont Square Church in L. A. and the First Methodist Church in Pasadena. He was graduated from SC in 1939.
Studied in Europe
In 1949 he went to Europe for 15 months and studied at the American Conservatory of Music at Fontainbleau, and the National Conservatory of Music in Paris. Clarke was accepted as the only private student of the world renowned organist Marcel Dupre and received much praise from the organ virtuoso for his work.
During World War II he served in the Army as a special agent of the counter intelligence corps in Germany. Besides his work at Pierce Junior College. Clarke is organist director - at the North Glendale Methodist Church.
Fourth Year
This is the fourth year that the Religion and Education lecture series has been presented by University Chaplain Clinton Neyman. Other guest lecturers will be Mrs. J. W. Pixley, teacher of English and senior problems at Venice High School; Dr Samuel Dinin, executive director Bureau of Jewish Education of the Los Angeles Jewish Community Council: and Stewart G. Cole, educational director of the Southern California Region, National Conference of Christian and Jews Incorporated.
Official
Notice
Wednesday, July 4, will be observed by the University as an official holiday. Classes will not meet and all University offices will be closed.
E. C. Bolton,
R. A. Fisher,
A. S. Raubentieimer.
by the University.- Business Manager’s Office.
This figure does not includc the extra spaces available on the new lot at 35th Street and Hoover Boulevard which was completed the first week in June. It added more than 45 student and faculty spaces to the total.
1330 More An additional 1330 spaces are located within a radius of three blocks of the University from 10 cents a day to 50 cents an hour.
Many people have complained that tht closing of 36th Street has cut down the number of parking spaces available, but the survey shows that at the same time the old Dental Field was paved and provided 204 student spaces. The entrance to the new lot is on 37th Place. This is now the largest single student parking lot on campus.
Fre? off campus parking areas include two lots on Exposition near the Museum and the Shrine lots which are usually about half full during the day.
Other Lots Other lots near campus are located at 36th Place and Vermont, which costs 10 cents a day or $2 a month; 36th Street and Vermont, 15 cents a day; and Exposition and Flower, 35 cents a day. The lots vary from 30 to 50 spaces each.
For those who are in a hurry and want to defy the police, fines ranging from $2 to $10 are waiting. Parking where it is marked no standing, stopping, or parking, draws a $10 fine.
Double parking or parking where it is marked temporary no parking for coliseum events also costs $10. A $5 ticket is imposed on people parking in after-hours areas. The least you can draw is $2 for overtime parking in a one or two hour parking zone.
Russian Policies Set for Analysis
SOVIET RESEARCH—Dr. Harold C. Deutsch, who will speak on “Where Are We Going With Russia“ at the assembly tomorrow at 11 a.m., in 133 FH, is shown in the library as he prepares his notes. Deutsch is a visiting professor.
Marineland Trip, Harbor Tour Set
Desert Island Wildlife Greets Trojan 'Consequences Victim
Trojan Jack Forbes, 22, graduate student, had a welcoming committee of sea lions and sea gulls as he arrived at a small desert island in the Santa Barbara group Saturday to ‘‘pay the consequences,”
He will spend two months on the one mile by one-half mile isle with only the sea gulls, sea lions, and a Truth or Consequences staff assistant, Cap Hoskins, to keep him compa,ny. He was selected from the studio audience Friday night to participate in the zany stunt.
The modern Rip van Winkle will be completely out of touch with civilization for the full two months. Food will be dropped from an airplane and the only outsiders will be closed-mouth NBC cameramen who will visit the island from time to time to get pictures for showing on the network program. He will be allowed no radio or newspapers—only books.
When he is flown back to the studio he will be asked questions on such current affairs as the World Series, the Democratic convention, and changes in the world situation. For each shot of the first five he calls correctly he will win $1,000, for the sixth one—$5,000.
Trips to Marineland and the Los Angeles Harbor are scheduled for students and faculty this weekend by the URA.
The Marineland junket will begin Saturday at 8:30 a.m. in front of the PE building. The tour will cost only $1 instead of the usual $2 and will take Trojans through the large marine museum, featuring various forms of fish life, octupus, shell fish, and sea lions.
The boat harbor tour will leave the PE building at 4 p.m. Sunday and the party will go on a cruise of the harbor from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Tillman Hall, URA director, said that students should start looking forward to the trip to Mexico on Saturday, July 14. which will include stopovers at the San Diego Zoo, Tijuana, the Capistrano mission, and the marriage place of Ramona.
Last weekend URA groups visited Disneyland and the Huntington Library.
Tickets for all URA trips and activities can be obtained by visiting the office, 112 PE.
Dr. Deutsch Gives Talk
“Where Are We Going With Russia” will be the topic of Dr. Harold C. Deutsch, visiting professor from the University of Minnesota, when he speaks at 11 a.m. tomorrow in 133 FH.
Dr. Deutsch will analyze the present Soviet policy in terms of what he calls the “long range 40-year program of the Communists.”
“There is more confusion now than at any time in the last 10 years in international relations as the result of the queer gira-tions in Red Policies,” he said, citing the recent deflation of Stalin and its effects on Soviet foreign relations.
“There has been no basic change in the Soviet policy in the last 40 years,” he said, “but only a rythmic pattern in which they play a game of appeasement and then one of toughness.”
The historian will also touch on the Soviet entry into economic and and trade competition with the United States.
Dr. Deutsch is teaching history courses in Contemporary Europe and Germany Under Hitler, and an international relations course called Diplomacy of Wogld War II this summer.
During the World War II. Dr. Deutsch did several special missions for the government including interviewing a group of Hitler’s top generals. He was awarded the Medal of Freedom for his war service.
Dr. Deutsch authored “The Genesis of Napoleonic Imperialism” in 1938 and was a member of the board of editors of the Journal of Modern History from 1948 to 1952. He has also contributed many articles to history magazines.
Roundup
Monday—“Teleforum” moderated by Chancellor Rufus B. Von KleinSmid. Topic is “Israel’s Paramount Proble'.ns.**
8 p.m., KTLA-TV, Channel 5. People interested in working on Summer News meet 1:15 p.m. in 402 SU.
Tuesday — Assembly, Dr. Harold Deutsch, speaking on “Where Are We Going With Russia?”, 11 a.m. in 133 FH. Religion and Education Series at 2:15 p.m., 133 FH. John P. Clarke, guest speaker on Sacred Music in Secular Schools.
Wednesday—-July 4, University holiday.